Savannah's creative corridor — Bull Street galleries, breweries, food-truck yards, and a steady stream of new makers.
Starland grew up around the old Starland Dairy and is now the city's most active independent retail and dining strip. Galleries, Two Tides Brewing, Graveface Records, and the Starland Yard food-truck park anchor a creative scene built on the adaptive reuse of early-20th-century dairies, garages, and storefronts. The district sits within the Thomas Square Streetcar Historic District, listed on the National Register in 1997.
Homes are mostly 1900s–1930s cottages and bungalows on smaller lots — well suited to renters who want walkable nightlife without downtown tourist crowds. Bull Street's bike infrastructure links Starland to Forsyth Park in minutes.
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Browse all rentalsSavannah's downtown core — 22 surviving Oglethorpe squares, brick rowhouses, and the most walkable address in the city.
Savannah's first post–Civil War streetcar suburb — gingerbread porches, wide avenues, and Forsyth Park at its northern edge.
Tree-lined streetcar suburb wrapping Starland — broad avenues, restored cottages, and Forsyth Park a few blocks north.
Quiet eastside residential pocket between the Historic District and Truman Parkway.
Historic westside neighborhood with deep Savannah roots — a National Register district under active restoration.
Established residential corridor between downtown and the islands — solid early-20th-century homes, quick commutes.